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vi%>!-v. ' 4 Keeping* Fresh Frntt. ! Fruit whioh commands the highest prioes in the oity markets has all been pioked by hand by thrifty farmers or V\Atra on/1 rrall waoVtAi? VtO> ing barreled up for winter uae. Pears should be packed in boxes .with newspapers between each layer of fruit. For winter pears and rarer ' varieties, it pays to wrap each one in newspaper, besides putting papers between the layers of fruit. Thus packed with the cover nailed d jwn, with the name and date of packing and kept in a cool place where they will not freeze, I have known the winter Nelis, the pound pear, Yicar of Wakefield and other late ripening varieties to keep perfectly till the June after they were gathored; luscious when eaten ripe or ba&pd for tea. k Many who now send hastily gathered, bruised, ill-prepared fruit to market in early autumn could get doable the price for it did they pick and pack it in ways herein suggested, and after keeping it three months or so in their own cellars, send it to cities in midwinter or spring after the first supplies are exhausted. Cherries are said to be curative in liver complaints. Faraday recommended apples as the moBt nourishing and healthful diet for grown people and children, especially eaten raw. Apples and plums are excellent for rheumatio people. Lemons are a pleasant remedy for biliousness, and jn some for rheumatism. One x>f the "wild grapes of South Carolina is also aid to cure consumption. Keep costly or rare fruits in olean paper candy boxes, or envelopes of pasteboard, as for flowers or ribbons, wrapping each one in paper, just as . oranges are paoked, retards decay. I have seen melons, grapes and peaches which had been hidden in hay m barn lofts, brought forth perfect and toothsome to grace New England ; farmers' Thanksgiving dinners. This is an ancient custom.?Detroit Free Press. Signaling at Sea. The British Government is testing a sew plan for signaling at sea, which Las already yielded remarkable resuits. It consists merely of an or-. dinary gong fastened to the bow of the ship below the water line. This aots as a transmitter, and the receivers are gongs of exactly similar tone + L* _ . a _ m 1?? i . ana raw 01 vioranou, one uu tsnuu mua of the ship below the water line. The receiving gong will take np and reproduce the sound of the sending gong from a long distance. Signals already have been dearly transmitted ten miles.?Chicago Herald. A Means Ont of the Dlfflealty. Any strain or bending of the back for any -length of time leaves it In a weakened condition. A means ont of the difficulty is always handy and cheap. Do as was done by llr. Herman Schwaygel, Aberdeen, S. D.. who says that for several years he suffered with a chronto stitch In the back, and was given up by doctors. Two bottles of St. Jaoobs Oil completely cured him. Also Mr. John Lucas, Elnora, Ind., says, that for several years he suffered with pains in the baok, . and one bottle of St. Jaoobs Oil cured him. There are manifold Instances of how to do the right thing in the right way and not break your back. The smallest telegraph facilities are possessed by Paraguay, Uraguay, Peru and Persia. Dr. Kilmer's 8wax?-Boot cures all Kidney and Bladder troubles. Pamphlet and Consultation free. Laboratory Blnghamton, N. Y. The pecan trees of Texas yield every year ,000,000 pounds of nuts. How's This t We offer one Hundred uouars ne^^ra zoi ny case of Catarrh that cannot be cured bj Bui's Catarrh Care. F. J. Chzw*t <& Co., Toledo, 0. We, the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe him perfectly honorable In all business transactions and financially able to carry oat any obligation made by their firm. west & Tbuax, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, Ohio. ' Waldisq, KiicvAif a Marvtx, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, Ohio. HaU's Catarrh Cure Is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Testimonials sent free. Price, 75c. per bottle. Sold by all Druggists. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for children tsething, softens the gums, reduces inflammation, allays pain, cures wind colic. 26o. a bottle It you want to be cured of a cough use Hale's Honey of Horehound and Tar. Pike's Toothache Drops Cure in one minute. Earl's Clover Root, the great blood purifier, gives freshness and clearness to the complexion and cures constipation. 36 cts.. 60 cts., 81. Hot Noons Chilly Nights 91 Fall present so many variations of temperature a? to tax the strength and make a pathway for disease. Hood's Sarsaparllla Will fortify the system against these dangers, by soaking pure, healthy blood. "Sores Hood's Bar*am 1 parilla came ont on my limbs. I tried different medi- m 11 dnee, but none helped ^ j At l??f im moth er heard of Hood's Sarsaparilla. After taking part of a bottle the sores began to heal, and after a short time I was completely cured. We keep it in the house most of the time. Asa blood purifier I know of nothing better." Lxox St. John, Fairmont, Minn. ? Hood's Pills are pnrelr vegetable, haad made ^^APowerful T Flesh Maker. A process that kills the taste of cod-liver oil has done good service?but the process that both kills the taste and effects partial digestion has done much more. Scott's Emulsion stands alone in the field of fat-foods. It is easy of assimilation because partly digested before taken. Scott's Emulsion checks Conumption and all other wasting diseases. Prepared by 8cotta Bowne, Chemist*. New York- Sold by drugcisti erery where. N Y N P?41 trn. TTENTION. FAltME'fS !-Have yot JC9k seen the wonderful New Bonanza Fan< Idjt MHlt most perfect grader, grain au( wed separator In the world. Takes oat all chess mustard, cockle. &c. Cleans anything from beam to timothy. Write to-day for particulars how to gei on* for almost nothing. Don't mis* this. Ad Itms BONANZA aiIl>L>S> Caatorland, S. Y . ... ..v ; .- ' ::-f~ WHAT WOMEN WEAR FASHION'S LATEST DECREES FOB COOL WEATHER. Tailor-Made Gowns and Coats?Hats and Sleeves?Black Is Fashionable?Capes Are Popular for Wraps. \ If AILOR-MADE gowns are deI i cidedly chic and trim lookI ing, being single-breasted with much smaller revers than last winter, and buttons are Bmall and quite close together. These coat bodices are either quite long or short, as the wearer prefers. The skirts are round and full, very similar in cut to those of last spring. A stylish costume seen last week was a tweed mixed in color, but in effect a rather peculiar shade of steel blue, round skirt, short bodice, singlebreasted, small revers, strap seams, which almost ornamented the skirt, white chemisette, standing collar with turn down collars and four-in-hand tie. The first sketch is a new shade of golden brown cloth, long ccat singlebreasted, with collar and cuffsj of black velvet, the revers of cloth, small blackrimmed buttons. As the season advances, and it grows too cold for thin chemisettes, one of black velvet full, ; also collar, would make this costume more rich-looking and more dressy. xne nat is 01 Drown ien, who pon- ] pon, and band of black. These long i coats may be a sort of -warning of the approach of redingotes, and there is a i whisper that embroidered polonaises 1 will be next in order. Chemisettes of ' fnll soft materials, snch as silk, sarah, < crepon, and mousseline de soie, are in i high favor; the latter is also used to 1 make dog-collars, arranged in folds i and kept in place by bars of jet pearl i or steel. They are considered very i elegant. 1 Lace bodices, with silk sleeves and 1 PALL ASD WLNTKK PASHIO: skirts, are very pretty; also chiffon bodioes made in the same style. Blonses of all kinds still continue in favor. They are mostly tightfitting, and made of very rioh materials, for afternoon and evening wear. Mousseline de soie in -white, trimmed with guipure lace, is the most dainty for evening wear. Black is to be fashionable. Blaok embroidered net make handsome evening dresses, and certainly the crepons are very handaome, a narrow bordering of fur to edge the skirt, and 'full front of black chiffon trims the bodice with straps of jet to brighten and relieve the dull effects of the crepon. The fashion of sleeves of a different material from the gown has beon revived, and many rich silks will be used, aleo Turkish and Persian materials. Bayadere stripes are prom- I ;./.j i?4. ?T 1.? ~ I XOCU U3, UUl i;nCVA.O OCCIU uc DUIYIU^ ^ for the first notice, judging from the g appearance of woolen materials, which ^ ars in mixtures of two and three j colors, so blended as to be indescribable. Some of the new fancy silks are ~t in checks the size of dice, in three ] and sometimes four colors, dark blue, t white, light golden brown and black, or olive, light blue black and white, j and many other shades well blended j together. They will not look well on r short stout people, but Dame Fashion seems good-natured enough this season to have provided for one and all, and those who wish to look tall and slender, can find an endless variety of 1 stripes, some so small as to 6eem only t a thread, others pin-head stripes, while many silks have satin stripes of about half an inch, with shot effects ? in colors between. s Indications point to capes of all " kinds as the popular wrap, velvet, jot c and lace for dressy occasions, cloth- t trimmed with fur, and the English t military cape, now called by various 1 names, Scotch, tourist and golf. 1 The second sketch is of dark blue 1c ' v- 'rtr- V. : r - v ? . , 0..-,.- . ; cloth, with lining of cape and hood of plaid silk in dark blue blaok and tan, crossed with red. Many are made of reversible cloth, having one side in dark colors, and the other in gay plaids, some of rough cloths, others tweeds in exceptionally fine quality, reversible, and are procurable in many different colors, one of the most successful having one side in oak brown, and the other in a smart red on/1 Vlna Vrvvafftr oloA oro auu r i uc i/UCV/Ui i ci j tJ uLJ axou M&O the combinations of fawn black and white, with a check in pale tan color crossed in red, and cigar brown, with a, tan check crossed with pale blue. Plaids of all descriptions, in faot, are used for one side of these reversible cloths. These new wraps are comfortably long, and smartly cut with stylish hood, and most ingeniously arranged with straps from the shoulder, which pf S'S FOR THE CHILD KEN. sross over the chest and then pass iround the waist, so that the cape can )e thrown open to any width without 'olding from the shoulders. There is very little news in reference o coats. The sleeves of gowns are (till very full, and as long as they jontinue to be in vogue let us hope to rear something that will not ruin our lispositions and sleevas at the same iime, and certainly coats accomplish joth. If the very full sleeves stay vith us, neither will we have many ooped-up skirts or draperies, notwithstanding the signs of their appearmce in earnest before winter, as jroad shoulder effects demand ulaiu laring skirts, with little fullness at ;he waist. VELVETEEN IN FAVOR. Velveteen, which formerly was such i despised material, and which has igured as such so largely iu novel 3 md tales, is now woven with a glossiless and coloring which makes it delirable for handsome gowns. The ichest weaves have ribs, stripes and rarious patterns with figures of dots, itars, Vandyke and electric lines, and hese of bright contrasting colors with he plain or moire grounds. The latest thing in this material is a cotton )lusb, which washes well and is prinsipally used for morning dresses, >louses and dresses for children. Tho iseful and the beautiful are now beng combined by the mechanical jenius of the ago to an extent that >ur grandmothers never dreamed of. Certainly they never imagined a day trVmn r*lriaT> ttroiafa on/1 rlrnctoa Tronic IUVU ^/IUUU it Miov'j uuu uiv,guuj n w ui\.? I )e thrust unceremoniously into tho amilv wash. Anothor improvement n this lino is a style of ribbons in various fashionable colors and in jlack, which wash perfectly and are ntended for the ornamentation of unlergarinents, so that the decorations )f these artioles of clothing need not je laboriously withdrawn every time i garment is laundered. PRETTY NEW PETTICOATS. Some of the new petticoats are vorks of art. One very handsome ikirt is of Mervoilltux satin, shot in ;hree colors, with large satin checks n pale coral, turquoise bluo, and jarnet. Handsome black r,atin skirts ire trimmed with colored ribbons and ace. Some ot the skirts aie frilled ip to the waist at ths baok, suggestng the coming use of steels. Brocade s extensively useu, and ior those who ove the rustle oi silk are lined with jlace, That Artistic Crease. Some genius has invented a simple ittle instrument, by the use of which he dudelet can always easily keep his rousers properly creasod without tho ixpense of sending them to the tailor svery few days, or tho trouble of reiorting himself to th* sad-iron. It is i pair of small iron rollers, mounted >n 6ci6sor-like handles, so arranged hat the crease can bo clamped beween them and pressed hard. A daily oiling every moraing is warranted to weep the desirable creasa in first-rate :ondition.?New O/lcans Picayune. W . 7] WORDS OF WISDOM. Strength comes with exercise. Intolerance is never argument. Keep yonr troubles to yourself. Don't keep good news to yourself. A pleased man is easily convinced. Victory is often a question of hold* ing on. Morality never looks well on dress parade. Genius and originality are blood relations. A waiting game is one which two can seldom play. Every reform that comes and stays besrins in the heart. "Follow your leader" is a dangerous game even for boys. Some parents need an introduction to their own children. Some men never win because they never expect to win. There is liable to be much base alloy in coined words. Most folks get savage when they mean only to be severe. When all men know little, how can any one man know it all? How little anything costs that is to be paid for in the future. He that smiles and says nothing often slanders and lies mcrat. The man who is always thinking ot evil things will most likely be a sufferer from his thoughts. To make a well-rounded citizen the moral sensibilities must be one with the mental faculties. The best stimulant toward right political aotion is a healthy interest in what is to be done. A man who is always boasting what he has done is not always the boldest in the hoar of danger. It is not always the damage of an injury that is galling, bat the spirit in which it is prompted. Don't try to add to the mystery of an unknown subject something of a deeper mystery, a more unknown. The Only Fire-Masted Schooner. The schooner Governor Ames, the largest fore-and-after in the world and the only five-masted schooner, arrived in Providence the other day with 2825 tons of ooal. She has recently been engaged in oarrying lumber from the Pacific ports to Australia. She is 265 feet long overall, 232 feet long on her keel, fifty feet beam, twenty-one feet deep, and her tonnage register is 1768.77. She can carry 3000 tons of ooal on a draft of twenty feet. She 1 i i j _ r xv_ 1 a Xius u uBUieruuitru ui ia? ueuo quality of white oak thirty-three feet long,, fifteen feet deep, and nine inohes thick, and nine hatchways, eaoh twenty-four feet cross decks and eight feet fore and aft. Her outside planking, the heaviest ever pat on a schooner, is sb inches thick, and at the gunwale seven inohes. The five lower masts are called foremast, mainmast, mizzenmast, jiggermast, and spankermast, and are eaoh 115 feet in length, the topmasts being eaoh flfty-Bix feet long. The jibboom is seventy-five feet long, and the sohooner spreads 7000 feet of canvas. She has two anohors weighing 6500 pounds eaoh, with eighty fathoms 2j-inch chain, besides a steam anchor oi 1850 pounds and a kedge of 1000 pounds. The sails are hoisted with a donkey engine of thirty horse-power, and she has a large steam capstan and a No. 11 windlass, the largest made. It cost $75,000 to build the Governor Ames. Her master, Captain Cornelius A. Davis, of Somerset, Mass., is one of five brothers, all of whom are or have been sea captains, as was their father before them.?Detroit Free Press. Punning by Wire Not Allowed. Borne one with an injured right hand asked a telegraph operator at a summer resort on the New Jersey coast if he would write down and then send a message. The operator then volunteered to take the short dictation and the person delivered the following brief message: ' 'Cannot oome to-morrow. Sorry. C. Eyhe." Being in a hurry the sender of the message went away without examining what had been written in the blank spaoes. The message was delivered in New York as follows: "Cannot come to-morrow. Sorry. q-ri i a~- ii H-LK. The person who received it understood from whom the message was, but did not think much of the pun, which he thought was deliberate. He sent back this answer: "Yon aren't Sea Air. You are Fresh 'Eyre." Then, until explanations were made, there was a coolness between them that not even the summer resorts of North Greenland could equal.?New York Tribune. Hotel "Dark Rooms." Ordinary readers must occasionally be puzzled by the now frequent addition of the words "dark room" to the advertisements of hotels and boarding houses. So numerous [are the photographers, amateur and otherwise, whc^ now travel about the country provided with kodak and camera that the provision of a dark room for the purpose of their pastime, or profession, as the case may be, has become a feature with many hotels. It is sometimes only a shed or outhouse, rendered absolutely iight-proot and provided with a red light tor the use of the photographer, and a little -water with a cistern for containing it. Some hotel keepers have at hand for tiiese customers some of the stock chemicals they require, the general use of the dry plate rendering such dangerous poisons as are scheduled under the Bale of drugs act unnecessary lor the production of tho photographs.? Washington Star. Hiiayn A Big Shipment of Salt. A remarkable freight train went through the Hoosac tunnel recently. It consisted of fifty-seven cars loaded with Worcester salt, on its way from the works in Silver Springs, X. Y., to wholesale grocers in Boston and other cities in New England. Two locomotives pulled it, and one held it back on the down grades. The salt weighed about 2,000.000 pounds. It was tho largest shipment of chloride of sodium ever made by rail. The train was tbe longest that ever passed through the Hoosftc tunnel.?Auburn (N. Y.) Advertiser. CUBIOCS FACTS. In Prance wine ia transported by Tail in tank cars. . ! Snakes, frogs, toads and lizards are unknown in Newfoundland. 1 A snake with two liorns on its head has been seen at Way cross, Ga. I Homing instincts of the swallow have bee a utilized in England. I Some of the dentists in Vienna, Austria, fill teeth with annealed glass. I It is said that in 1775 a hailstone weighing twenty ounces fell at Murcia, Spain. ! The University of Konigsberg, Germany, now expels students who take part in dnels. | Lady Jane Grey read Plato at the age of thirteen, and Mme. Eoland wat an omnivoroos reader at the age of four. Cave dwellings of elaborate construction have been familiarly known and used in Japan from time immemorial. A man is in the hospital at Canton, Ohio, in oonsequence of having sawed off a limb against which his ladder was resting. A mole's home.in the earth has always four or five outlets. By means of one or the other the inmate is al* I ways able to elude any danger. The bees of Brazil hang their combs ' outside on the branches of trees at the j very summit and at the end of the I slenderest twigs, to be out of the reach of monkeys. East Broadway, New York City, i boasts of a boy barber who is but eleven years old. He is an Italian. and is a skillful little shaver, who has ' to stand on a stool -while he does his work. A Cincinnati man's will just made publio, bequeaths the sum of $1000 to be used in seeking a method whereby , mosquitoes may be destroyed. He I had suffered for years from a large bite on the nose. In Belgium a dog oan ride in any passenger carriage by buying a ticket. Live stock in this country is kept out I of cars?except the railway hog. By ' the way, the dog's ticket is usually ; bought for him. According to a Roumanian cnstoni, when a servant has displeased his I master, the offender takes his boots in i his hands and places them before the bedroom door of his master. It is a sign of great submission. A twist in one of the legs of the trousers worn by Rufus Smith, of t Oakland, CaL, caused the gentleman ] to stumble and fall while he was | drawing them on. The fall caused in* i juries from which he died. Most of the so-called marble houses ! of the Rome of Augustus were not ! suoh in reality. The plasterer's art I had then reached a high state of perj fection, and gave to stucco the ap? ? ? - - ? ^ AT** ? ?Vvl A > peur&uue U1 LUG uacoi joanx Uic. Men with weak wrists can strengthen i them by clasping and unolasping the ' hands half an hour a day. Make a hard fist every time the hand is closed. The strengthening of the mosoles of the forearm will be perceptible inside of a month. An explorer in Guatemala reported the discovery, in an ancient mound in that country, of many small jars, each containing the remains of a little finger from the human hand. It is supposed to have been the custom of mourners in some prehistoric raoo to make this sacrifice. War's Modern Horrors, Various experiments with the new rifles, which have recently taken place in Germany, have demonstrated, in a very conclusive manner, that another war would practically be one ol annihilation. A well-known French writer, in an article which he devotes to the subject, says that the battlefield would, at the end o? the engagement, be covered with two or three hundred thousand corpses, all crushed and broken, and would be nothing but ? vast charnel house. No one would bi left to bury the dead, and pestilence would, in turn, sweep away the country people. Pointing the moral, he adds that the man?Emperor, King or President of a Republic?who, under these conditions, would expose the human race to such a fate, would be the greatest criminal that the world had ever seen. It is tolerably plain that the horrors and the butchery which a war would entail are becoming more and more recognized, and that the terrible vista thus opened out is exeroising a sobering effect on those who were formerly wont to discuss various eventualities with a light heart.?London Telegraph. KNOWLEDGE Brings comfort and improvement and +S>. ol oninvmont XVllPTI VCiiUS IV pl^UIUU v.ijvju.vuv .. rightly used. The many, who live better than others and enjoy life more, with less expenditure, by more promptly adapting the world's best products to the neeos of physical being, will attest the value to health of the pure liquid laxative principles embraced in the remedy, Syrup of Figs. Its excellence is due to its presenting in the form most acceptable and pleasant to the taste, the refreshing and truly beneficial properties of a perfect laxative ; effectually cleansing the system, dispelling colds, headaches and fevers ana permanently curing constipation. It has given satisfaction to millions and met with the approval of the medical profession, because it acts on the Kidneys, Liver and Bowels without weakening them and it is perfectly free from every objectionable substance. Syrup of Figs is for side by all drug^ gists in 50c and $1 bottles, but it is man? ufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. only, whose name is printed on every package, also the name, Syrup of Figs, and being well informed, you will not accept any substitute if offered* i Iff J7t>solufe/y^m Pare 14 I regard the Roya best manufactured and ii Author i Samoan Canoes. "The large canoea, called tanmuoluas, are built from a keel. The keel is laid in one solid piece extending high np in the air at bow and stern, both ends being shaped alik9. The strips and planks are split out of log?, and have no uniform dimensions, varying from six or eight inches to six or eignt ieet in lengtn, ana are 01, different .widths. These are fastenod to the keel, and the sides gradually bnilt np, not by lapping one over tl e other, bnt edge to edge, making a tight, smooth surface. To accomplish this, the center of the plank is dressed down thin along one edge. Then by boring holes through the thick edges at intervals, on the inside, and tying them together with fiber?not a nail is used?a tight joint is made, and the outside left clean and smooth. Often the seams are filled with gum which exudes from the bread-fruit tree; this makes them perfectly water-tight. "The skill and ingenuity displayed in making and finishing these craft is something remarkable, for the reason that the planks are of such uneven lengths and widths and every part is fastened by fiber."?Outing. Tagarles of Taste. An importer of rattan furniture complains that it is impossible to keep up with the vagaries of publio taste. In the seasons when he imports big chairs customer's come round and complain that there's nothing low enough for a woman to oocupy in comfort, and, when next season he imports small chairs there is a growl because there is nothing roomy and luxurious. The best of the oriental furniture imported for the last fifteen years has taught the Western world a lesson in luxury, and it is worthy of note that the light, cool chairs, lounges and the like, of Chinese, Japanese and East Indian make are peculiarly fitted to the semi-tropical summer of this region.?New York JournaL Pasquinades took their name from the shop of a Eoman tailor named Pasquin, the square in front of which contained a celebrated statue, on the pedestal of wmcn all sorts of sqmos and lampoons were posted. Q DoU; for women, accordi / J vC do, t^le^r washing /Pearline, it m L^^rO Pearline is A rubbing VI $<ftand,f Y ^y/ See the troubles th; a 1 other ways of washing r ^ out rub, rub, rub, or the acids if you try to make it eai absolutely safe. CAM/] Peddlers and some nnsernpuloi VJCX1U9 or "the same as Pearline." if ant*" y?ur srocer senc ?3 a C K honest?send it batk, "A Fair Face May Prove Plain Girl i Uiri I Drilling Machines WELL for any depth. jirroEEP aooo " bs7 ass Ban H I Best line of Portable and Semi-Portable Ka- ( chines ever made. Drill S to 12 Inches In diamo- ] ter, all depths. Mounted and Down Machines, j Steam and Horso Power. Self Pumping Tools for j shallow wells. Bope tools for largo and doep . wells. State size and depth you want to drill. LOOMIS & NYMAN, Tlffln, Ohio. ^ ffl AT RJ n Et. B C'JLLtluK, PoroHKEErsiE, ? a ST Kn&ra -N-Y- ?aen both J**" t;e ILnV 9 ITI^Ivl best educational advantajicj atthelowestco-t. Healthful;beBtInfluences;elective studios. Superior Instruction. Uepiirtmeutsor ifo kkeeping and Business Studies; Shorthand and Type writing; English and Modern Languages; renman shivand Drawing; the .elementary _branchp?; e*c NO VACATIONS. I'OMIiniin omoiuni mi competent student*. for Cntal'Btio CLEMENT C. GAINES, l'ros- fl ? B H Cfl ? lrtcnr, .'! ) Wnshinctnn Street, ll 533, IP N R? Poughlceopsle, New lork. . " ^ tta bi 8a v3 l?* EPILEPTIC. PARALYTIC and NERVINE INSTITUTE, 667 Massachusetts Ave., Boston, Mass. j (Near Washington St.) For the trentment of epilepsy, paralvsis, brain and nervous diseases In aU their forms The only paralytic Institute in the United States. Consultation free. Patients boarded, nursed and cared for. Office treatment If desired. Institute open daily. 8end for circulars. F)ENSIONw?hK""D.c: 'Successfully Prosecutes Claims Late Principal Examiner U.S. Pension Bureau. 3yrsln taat war. 15adjudicating claims, atty since CURES WHtKE ALL ELSE FAILS. 3^ Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use Jl In time. Sold by druggists. M H^ssaSgEcas^ss j . rvrJi. rtfogrPowder J 1 Baking Powder as the i the market" > if "Common Sense in ike Household A Silver Spoon In His Month. A little boy who has just Been bora in London is the heir to $480,000 a year, large estates in County Dowa and Berkshire, a very fine Londoa house in the very center of the fashionable qu&rter, a marquisate, two earldoms (one Irish and one English), two Irish and one English viscounty, an English and Irish barony.?Chicago Herald. J BUDS, Society (fir bud9, young women just entering the doors of soci,/!uj^gk-^yg^r ety or woman- * jd[ hood, require the (wisest care. To }$tr? 'W 1 tPRSCT be beautiful and . V charmine ther fmust have perfect health, with all it implies ?a clear skin, rosy cheeks, bright eyes and good spirits. At this period the young woman ia especially sensitive, and many nervous trouble^ which continue through life, have their origin at this * time. If there be pain, headache, backache, and nervous disturbances, or tjie general health not good, the judicious use of medicine should be emoloytd. Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription is the best restorative tonic and nervine at this time. The best bodily conditio* results from iU use. It's a remedy specially indicated for those delicate weaknesses and derangements that afflict womenkind at one period or another. YouH find that the woman who has faithfully used the "Prescription" is the picture ol health, she looks well and she feels well. - - -1 1- -If In catarrnai innammauon, in cnromc uw placements common to women, where there are symptoms of backache, dizziness at fainting:, bearing down sensations, disordered stomach, moodiness, fatigue, eta, the trouble is surely dispelled and the sufferer brought back to health and good spirits. ^ j "WOMAN'S ILLS." Mrs. W. r. Bates, of />ilwor(h^ Trumbull Co., m|^Wj|||)jwEeWSE took Doctor Pierfe's >?v Favorite Prescription, QpjXfr. . \ ) which has been a great dgOx rmdj benefit to me. I am in /*y excellent health now. I hope that every wo- yi man, who is trot bled jr/h ^VW/I with 'women's ills,' JjL will try the 'Prescrip- " v\ tion' and be benefited ml have been." Mrs. Bates. I ars or Kicks rig to whether they do, or don't in a sensible way. If they use eans good, hard dollars saved, i economy. All that ruinous r that makes you buy linens lannels twice as often as you to, is spared, to say nothing- of ime and labor. at women have to endure with . There's that hara, wearingdanger of ruining tilings with sy. Washing with Pearline is <* is grocers will tell yon " this is as good as" IT'S FALSE?Pearlino is never peddled, is you something in place of Pefcrline, bo 418 JAMES PYLE, New York. a Foul Bargain." Marry a if She Uses DLIO W. L. Douglas ?U^KT IS THE BEST, iS^E* NO SQUEAKING $5. CORDOVAN, FR?NCH& ENAMELLED CALf! jm. . :\ ^.spFlNECAlf&KANGAKH $ 3.5? P0L1CE.3 Soles. $2Si>2-w?RKINGMEN? EXTRA FINE. *2.*I.7.? Boys'SchoolShoei m LAD IES SBND FOR CATALOGUE >3^ terS&WW*" W* L.' DOUGLAS, BROCKTON, MASS. Sou can save money by wenrlncc tb? VV. Lt> Douglas 83.00 Shoe. Deeanic, we are th? largest manufacturers cm this grade ot shoes in the world, and guarantee their vaiuo fcy stsmpiag tho name ana price on the bottom, which protect you against high nrlccs and tno miacuerian s proms, uur snocs equal custom work in stylo, easy fitting ana wearing qualities. We have tliem aold everywhere a; lower prices for the value clve# than any other mafco. Take ao substitute. XI your dealer ?annot supply you, wo can. A:..''1 i?. The "LINENJ!" are the Beit and Host Kcoaeajlual Collars and Culls worn: tsey are ui.-wle of flo* cloth, both s-des 2iiisU?d alike, and reversible, one collar is equal to two of any ofLer kind. The it fit veil, irear ovtfi aart look well. A bor?f Ten Collars or 1'iro Pairs of Cuffs for Twenty-J?1t? A Sample Collar and Pair of Cnffs by mail for Six Cents. Name stylo and size. Address KEVEUSIBLE COLLAK COMPANY, 77 Franklin St., New York. ?7 giiby Su, Boater. $100 livery jHoutli?'Will guarantee to a- y on* willing to work. Business new, ea-y, pieasanc. Sample fro . D. S. Van Wyck, lougakeepsio, i\. Z. ft